Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Baby Bedding


I got a great deal on the baby bedding we decided on! I love EBAY! I didn't get everything in the photo, but got a 9-piece set for $50 + $20 shipping. Cute, huh? We have a crib and changing table picked out at Sam's online. We will probably get that soon, because it is on sale. I have started trying to clear a bit of stuff out of the room, little by little. The hard part is finding a place to put everything!

Monday, January 26, 2009

Singing Women of Texas

I sing with a wonderful group of ladies called the Singing Women of Texas. We are the Permian Basin chapter; there are 5 other chapters around this great state. One Saturday a month, we put on a concert at various churches around west Texas. This past Saturday we had 29 ladies and put on one of the best concerts since I've been with the group. (I think this is my 5th year)

These ladies have been such a blessing to me. They are true prayer warriors. Whenever I need prayer, all I have to do is send out a mass email to the group and I KNOW prayers are being lifted up! They share in my joys and my sorrows. The Lord always knows who and what we need in our lives at the right time.

Oh and did I mention the talent?!?! We have a very gifted group! Many are wives of music ministers, pianists, soloists, or just talented ladies that love music. Our director is a God send. Her voice and musical abilities are a special gift. I have to brag on our accompanists too. These 2 ladies have been playing piano/organ together for around 40 years! I am sure they have the same mind. There has never been a piece of music thrown at them that they can't perform.

In June, the SWOT will be celebrating their 15th anniversary. A joint concert will be performed in Houston with all 6 chapters totaling approximately 200 voices! If you ever get a chance to hear one of the groups perform, I encourage you to attend. You will be BLESSED!

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Planning for Baby

I am beginning to get a little stressed about not having anything ready for the baby. I am not as obsessive as I used to be about organization, but I do get stressed when things get put off til the last possible moment. Our baby is due in May, and so far we have NOTHING prepared! NO major purchases!

I really wanted this process to be a partnership between my husband and I. I try to show him cribs I've looked at online, names I kinda like, themes I'm thinking about, and I'm not getting a lot of response. Part of me says, just make the decisions and get things going.

I talked to him AGAIN last night and told him it was really bothering me and we needed to get the ball rolling. He said we could sit down when he got home from work today and "make a list." I already have some lists, but hopefully this is progress.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Weekend and the Baby

I had a good weekend with my hubby. It has been nice to have Saturdays and Sundays off together. We reached the 23 week mark in the pregnancy. I am feeling pretty good. The baby is really active. I am praying God will bless us with a healthy baby and also believing for a special musical talent that she can give back to the Lord someday. She really seems to love music because when I sing or she hears the music in church, she starts "dancing" in my tummy! Isn't that the coolest thing ever?

Friday, January 16, 2009

We got a Raise!

We got our first paycheck with the new entity I am working for and to my surprise, I had gotten a raise! (I have worked for a hospital-based EMS for almost 9 years, but on January 1, we became a county-based EMS.) I had heard we might get a cost of living raise at the first of the year, but wasn't sure how much it would be. Mine turned out to be about $1/hr!!! Praise God! We will need that!

The back pain has begun to intensify the last week or so. I know my body is stretching and twisting and making room; so I know this is to be expected. I sit on the couch every evening with the heating pad on my back. One day at a time, the Lord will help me through the next 17 weeks of this!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

In God's Eyes

This is a copy of an email I received today. It is pretty long, but WELL WORTH READING! From the book: God Allows U Turns: True Stories of Hope and Healing by Allison Bottke

By the time I was ten, I was totally ashamed of my father. All my friends called him names: Quasi-Moto, hunchback, monster, little Frankenstein, the crooked little man with the crooked little cane. At first it hurt when they called him those things, but soon I found myself agreeing with them. He was ugly, and I knew it!

My father was born with something called parastremmatic dwarfism. The disease made him stop growing when he was about thirteen and caused his body to twist and turn into a grotesque shape. It wasn't too bad when he was a kid. I saw pictures of him when he was about my age. He was a little short but quite good-looking. Even when he met my mother and married her when he was nineteen, he still looked pretty normal. He was still short and walked with a slight limp, but he was able to do just about anything. Mother said, "He even used to be a great dancer."

Soon after my birth, things started getting worse. Another genetic disorder took over, and his left foot started turning out, almost backward. His head and neck shifted over to the right; his neck became rigid and he had to look over his left shoulder a bit. His right arm curled in and up, and his index finger almost touched his elbow. His spine warped to look something like a big, old roller coaster and it caused his torso to lie sideways instead of straight up and down like a normal person. His walk became low, awkward, and deliberate.. He had to almost drag his left foot as he used his deformed right arm to balance his gait.

I hated to be seen with him. Everyone stared.. They seemed to pity me. I knew he must have done something really bad to have God hate him that much. By the time I was seventeen, I was blaming all my problems on my father. I didn't have the right boyfriends because of him. I didn't drive the right car because of him. I wasn't pretty enough because of him. I didn't have the right jobs because of him. I wasn't happy because of him.

Anything that was wrong with me, or my life, was because of him. If my father had been good-looking like Jane's father, or successful like Paul's father, or worldly like Terry's father, I would be perfect! I knew that for sure.

The night of my senior prom came, and Father had to place one more nail in my coffin; he had volunteered to be one of the chaperons at the dance.

My heart just sank when he told me. I stormed into my room, slammed the door, threw myself on the bed, and cried. "Three more weeks and I'll be out of here!" I screamed into my pillow. "Three more weeks and I will have graduated and be moving away to college." I sat up and took a deep breath.

"God, please make my father go away and leave me alone. He keeps sticking his big nose in everything I do. Just make him disappear, so that I can have a good time at the dance."

I got dressed, my date picked me up, and we went to the prom. Father followed in his car behind us. When we arrived, Father seemed to vanish into the pink chiffon drapes that hung everywhere in the auditorium. I thanked God that He had heard my prayer. At least now I could have some fun.

Midway through the dance, Father came out from behind the drapes and decided to embarrass me again. He started dancing with my girlfriends. One by one, he took their hand and led them to the dance floor. He then clumsily moved them in circles as the band played. Now I tried to vanish into the drapes.

After Jane had danced with him, she headed my way. Oh, no! I thought.. She's going to tell me he stomped on her foot or something.

"Grace," she called, "you have the greatest father."

My face fell. "What?"

She smiled at me and grabbed my shoulders. "Your father's just the best. He's funny, kind, and always finds the time to be where you need him. I wish my father was more like that."

For one of the first times in my life, I couldn't talk. Her words confused me.

"What do you mean?" I asked her.

Jane looked at me really strangely. "What do you mean, what do I mean? Your father's wonderful. I remember when we were kids, and I'd sleep over at your house. He'd always come into your room, sit down in the chair between the twin beds, and read us a book. I'm not sure my father can even read," she sighed, and then smiled. "Thanks for sharing him."

Then, Jane ran off to dance with her boyfriend. I stood there in silence.

A few minutes later, Paul came to stand beside me.

"He's sure having a lot of fun."

"What? Who? Who is having a lot of fun?" I asked.

"Your father. He's having a ball."

"Yeah. I guess." I didn't know what else to say.

"You know, he's always been there," Paul said. "I remember when you and I were on the mixed-doubles soccer team. He tried out as the coach, but he couldn't run up and down the field, remember? So they picked Jackie's father instead. That didn't stop him. He showed up for every game and did whatever needed to be done. He was the team's biggest fan. I think he's the reason we won so many games. Without him, it just would have been Jackie's father running up and down the field yelling at us. Your father made it fun. I wish my father had been able to show up to at least one of our games. He was always too busy."

Paul's girlfriend came out of the restroom, and he went to her side, leaving me once again speechless.

My boyfriend came back with two glasses of punch and handed me one. "Well, what do you think of my father?" I asked out of the blue.

Terry looked surprised. "I like him. I always have.."

"Then why did you call him names when we were kids?"

"I don't know. Because he was different, and I was a dumb kid."

"When did you stop calling him names?" I asked, trying to search my own memory.

Terry didn't even have to think about the answer. "The day he sat down with me outside by the pool and held me while I cried about my mother and father's divorce. No one else would let me talk about it. I was hurting inside, and he could feel it. He cried with me that day. I thought you knew."

I looked at Terry and a tear rolled down my cheek as long-forgotten memories started cascading into my consciousness.

When I was three, my puppy got killed by another dog, and my father was there to hold me and teach me what happens when the pets we love die.

When I was five, my father took me to my first day of school. I was so scared. So was he. We cried and held each other that first day. The next day he became teacher's helper.. When I was eight, I just couldn't do math. Father sat down with me night after night, and we worked on math problems until math became easy for me. When I was ten, my father bought me a brand-new bike. When it was stolen, because I didn't lock it up like I was taught to do, my father gave me jobs to do around the house so I could make enough money to purchase another one.. When I was thirteen and my first love broke up with me, my father was there to yell at, to blame, and to cry with. When I was fifteen and I got to be in the honor society, my father was there to see me get the accolade. Now, when I was seventeen, he put up with me no matter how nasty I became or how high my hormones raged.

As I looked at my father dancing gaily with my friends, a big toothy grin on his face, I suddenly saw him differently. The handicaps weren't his, they were mine! I had spent a great deal of my life hating the man who loved me. I had hated the exterior that I saw, and I had ignored the interior that contained his God-given heart.. I suddenly felt very ashamed.

I asked Terry to take me home, too overcome with feelings to remain.

On graduation day, at my Christian high school, my name was called, and I stood behind the podium as the valedictorian of my class. As I looked out over the people in the audience, my gaze rested on my father in the front row sitting next to my mother. He sat there, in his one and only, specially made suit, holding my mother's hand and smiling.

Overcome with emotions, my prepared speech was to become a landmark in my life.

"Today I stand here as an honor student, able to graduate with a 4.0 average. Yes, I was in the honor society for three years and was elected class president for the last two years. I led our school to championship in the debate club, and yes, I even won a full scholarship to Kenton State University so that I can continue to study physics and someday become a college professor.

"What I'm here to tell you today, fellow graduates, is that I didn't do it alone. God was there, and I had a whole bunch of friends, teachers, and counselors who helped. Up until three weeks ago, I thought they were the only ones I would be thanking this evening. If I had thanked just them, I would have been leaving out the most important person in my life. My father."

I looked down at my father and at the look of complete shock that covered his face.

I stepped out from behind the podium and motioned for my father to join me onstage. He made his way slowly, awkwardly, and deliberately. He had to drag his left foot up the stairs as he used his deformed right arm to balance his gait. As he stood next to me at the podium, I took his small, crippled hand in mine and held it tight.

"Sometimes we only see the silhouette of the people around us," I said. "For years I was as shallow as the silhouettes I saw. For almost my entire life, I saw my father as someone to make fun of, someone to blame, and someone to be ashamed of. He wasn't perfect, like the fathers my friends had.

"Well, fellow graduates, what I found out three weeks ago is that while I was envying my friends' fathers, my friends were envying mine. That realization hit me hard and made me look at who I was and what I had become. I was brought up to pray to God and hold high principles for others and myself. What I've done most of my life is read between the lines of the Good Book so I could justify my hatred."

Then, I turned to look my father in the face.

"Father, I owe you a big apology. I based my love for you on what I saw and not what I felt. I forgot to look at the one part of you that meant the most, the big, big heart God gave you. As I move out of high school and into life, I want you to know I could not have had a better father. You were always there for me, and no matter how badly I hurt you, you still showed up. Thank you!"

I took off my mortar board and placed it on his head, moving the tassel just so.

"You are the reason I am standing here today. You deserve this honor, not me."

And as the audience applauded and cried with us, I felt God's light shining down upon me as I embraced my father more warmly than I ever had before, tears unashamedly falling down both our faces.

For the first time, I saw my father through God's eyes, and I felt honored to be seen with him.

Happiness often sneaks in..... through a door you didn't know you left open.

"IF GOD BRINGS YOU TO IT HE WILL BRING YOU THROUGH IT""HE IS IN CONTROL OF ALL SITUATIONS""THERE IS NO SITUATION GREATER THAN HE"

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

I'm a Bad Blogger!

I know, I'm a very bad blogger! I haven't written anything since October, that's a shame. So I'll give a quick update on my life:

I am now at 22 weeks in the pregnancy. Things are going very well. We are so blessed. We had an ultrasound last week and found out we are having a girl! I am scared to death, but I know the Lord will help me through.

I have been riding out my sick pay at work for a few months now. God opened another door because the Clerk at our EMS station retired after 13 years working with us. So I got to start in her position the 3rd week of December. It was full time for a while, now I am only going in 2 days a week. Big transition going on at work and they really don't have things for me to do 5 days a week. But it still helps to extend my leave a little longer.

My life is changing. My priorities seem to be different. I have trouble focusing on my commitments at times. Life will go on, right!?!